IV. THE PRINCIPAL CONTRADICTION AND THE PRINCIPAL ASPECT OF A CONTRADICTION - 3
In capitalist society, capitalism has changed its position from
being a subordinate force in the old feudal era to being the dominant force,
and the nature of society has accordingly changed from feudal to capitalist. In
the new, capitalist era, the feudal forces changed from their former dominant
position to a subordinate one, gradually dying out. Such was the case, for example,
in Britain and France. With the development of the productive forces, the
bourgeoisie changes from being a new class playing a progressive role to being
an old class playing a reactionary role, until it is finally overthrown by the
proletariat and becomes a class deprived of privately owned means of production
and stripped of power, when it, too, gradually dies out. The proletariat, which
is much more numerous than the bourgeoisie and grows simultaneously with it but
under its rule, is a new force which, initially subordinate to the bourgeoisie,
gradually gains strength, becomes an independent class playing the leading role
in history, and finally seizes political power and becomes the ruling class.
Thereupon the nature of society changes and the old capitalist society becomes
the new socialist society. This is the path already taken by the Soviet Union,
a path that all other countries will inevitably take.
Look at China, for instance. Imperialism occupies the principal
position in the contradiction in which China has been reduced to a semi-colony,
it oppresses the Chinese people, and China has been changed from an independent
country into a semi-colonial one. But this state of affairs will inevitably
change; in the struggle between the two sides, the power of the Chinese people
which is growing under the leadership of the proletariat will inevitably change
China from a semi-colony into an independent country, whereas imperialism will
be overthrown and old China will inevitably change into New China.
The change of old China into New China also involves a change in
the relation between the old feudal forces and the new popular forces within
the country. The old feudal landlord class will be overthrown, and from being
the ruler it will change into being the ruled; and this class, too, will
gradually die out. From being the ruled the people, led by the proletariat,
will become the rulers. Thereupon, the nature of Chinese society will change
and the old, semi-colonial and semi-feudal society will change into a new
democratic society.
Instances of such reciprocal transformation are found in our past
experience. The Ching Dynasty which ruled China for nearly three hundred years
was overthrown in the Revolution of 1911, and the revolutionary Tung
Meng Hui under Sun Yat-sen's leadership was victorious for a time. In
the Revolutionary War of 1924-27, the revolutionary forces of the
Communist-Kuomintang alliance in the south changed from being weak to being
strong and won victory in the Northern Expedition, while the Northern warlords
who once ruled the roost were overthrown. In 1927, the people's forces led by
the Communist Party were greatly reduced numerically under the attacks of
Kuomintang reaction, but with the elimination of opportunism within their ranks
they gradually grew again. In the revolutionary base areas under Communist
leadership, the peasants have been transformed from being the ruled to being
the rulers, while the landlords have undergone a reverse transformation. It is
always so in the world, the new displacing the old, the old being superseded by
the new, the old being eliminated to make way for the new, and the new emerging
out of the old.
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